rhino wrote:Aidan wrote:Was there ever a comprehensive study? The only study on its cost effectiveness used calculations so rough as to be useless, and its report has some blatant errors in the cost benefit analysis.
Well, I guess that's an objective(?) thing, isn't it? As far as ARTC was concerned, it was comprehensive enough for them.
Yes, and considering how an objectively uncomprehensive report was comprehensive enough for ARTC, it almost seems as if ARTC were looking for reasons not to build it - but I cant think of any motive for that unless it's part of a big conspiracy to build the ultra expensive southern route through the Adelaide Hills.
See Rubberman's comment above for more clarification. You're not the first person to bemoan the comprehensiveness of a report that didn't come up with the result you wanted.
The comprehensiveness isn't the problem - the inability to do anything about it is.
Aidan wrote:Far from being a pie in the sky idea, it's an entirely sensible improvement that really should have been implemented at the time of standardization. The subsequent rise in land prices is the main reason it's so expensive now.
This is assuming there was money available at the time of standardisation, which was already an enormous project that cost heaps. Sure, costs always go up, but that doesn't mean everything should be done now to avoid higher costs at a later date. That way lies the poor house.
Ideally there would be a pipeline of projects that could be brought forward or back as required. But that doesn't alter the fact that the Federal Government could have funded it at a time when it would have also saved the cost of standardizing the line through the Adelaide Hills (the way they saved the cost of standardizing the Ballarat line). They chose not to and we've been denied the benefits ever since.
All that aside, I'm not convinced that making Adelaide Rail Yard a dead-end yard off the Melbourne-Perth railway is a good idea, from a rail freight point of view. IMO it will lead to a lot more trucks on the road. Even if the main rail yard is moved out to Mallala or thereabouts, it will be more likely that freight will be trucked in from there than transferred to Regency Park by rail, and then trucked.
What do you mean "Even if..."? Of course moving the main railyard further out would put more trucks on the road! There is no reason to move the terminal, and nor is there a good reason to make every train from Melbourne to Perth or Darwin run via Adelaide. But with significantly reduced train running costs between Adelaide and Melbourne, there should be the opportunity to attract a
much higher proportion of freight onto rail.